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European Health SystemsCase study – Croatia

After its turbulent history and independence in early 90s, Croatia has shown its efforts to become a part of the European family and finally joined the EU in the latest enlargement wave on 1st July 2013, becoming the 28th Member State. Five years later, in the series of European Health Systems workshops, the Young Gasteiners met in Zagreb ahead of the country´s first presidency of the Council of the European Union in the beginning of 2020.

Despite the crisis and major fiscal pressures on health expenditure, Croatia has kept publicly funded health services accessible to the entire population, and has made progress in recent years in improving the health status of its population. However, regardless of its accessibility and major medical successes (i.e. organ transplantation), the Croatian health system is currently facing many challenges, especially in the context of smoking, alcohol and obesity, structural issues related to centralization and geographical accessibility, corruption and financing, hospital accreditation and performance measurement, workforce and brain-drain.

From this outline, it is clear that there is a window of opportunity for a discussion in the framework of the Young Forum Gastein activities with the involvement of both Croatian and other European senior experts.

The first day was dedicated to an in-depth analysis of all of the components of a health system, with all the examples being taken from the Croatian health system, facilitated by two appointed lecturers from the European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies, Dr. Anne Spranger and Dr. Bernd Rechel. Croatian Deputy Minister of Health, Dr Mate Car, explained the main challenges detected within the scope of the national system, setting the scene for the interactive part of the workshop.

The Young Gasteiners then split into previously assigned groups and were expected to work on a specific challenge and come up with the tools and recommendations on how to approach it. Each group had a Croatian expert working closely on the topic who provided the background and additional context of the issues. The groups worked on two main topics; health workforce and hospital accreditation, management and performance.

The second day of the workshop was dedicated to the presentation of the group work to an audience of key Croatian stakeholders. An impressive range of policy makers, public health professionals, representatives of national health insurance, the pharmaceutical industry, academia and civil society were present to hear the Young Gasteiners’ ideas.

First, the two groups that had
worked on the challenges in the health workforce presented their ideas.
Interestingly, the two groups had come up with quite different solutions. The first
group presented actions in planning, recruiting and retaining the future health
workforce, based on the Framework for Remote Rural Workforce Stability. The
second group focused on nurses, presenting a ten-step action plan to improve
their status in the Croatian health care system, ending with the Yoda-esque
wish ‘May the workforce be with you’.

Next, the two groups that had
focused on hospital management came forward with their ideas. The first group
started refreshingly by pointing out the things that Croatia does well. Topics
that still need to be addressed are trust, vision, accountability and
implementation, and the way to do this is to launch a governance framework for
vertical collaboration and to ensure continuity of knowledge and expertise retention.
The second group presented a three-tiered approach to improve quality and
safety, performance monitoring and the use of patient experiences in hospital
monitoring.

Both sets of presentations were
followed by lively discussions between the Young Gasteiners and the experts. These
discussions focussed both on the promisingness of some of the presented
solutions as well as the barriers for implementing them, these barriers
sometimes being typically Croatian, sometimes universal. How can we uncover and
link data? How can we implement actions, what incentives are needed? How can we
shift focus from ‘making yourself seem the best’ to actually improving quality?
Who is responsible for making the necessary decisions?

This workshop has truly been a
thrilling learning experience. The process of diving into a country’s health
system and its challenges, coming up with solutions in a short time spam and
presenting and discussing these with high-level experts provides an invaluable
opportunity to refine skills necessary for our future as public health experts.
This concept is unique of its kind, it breaks the silos and helps us better
understand different organizations we work in and challenges we face in
delivering health care. And hopefully, the diverse perspectives from our
different countries and backgrounds gave the Croatian experts new ideas on how
to tackle the challenges facing the health workforce and hospital management.

Finally, let us not forget the
social part of our stay in Zagreb. Young Forum Gastein is above all a network,
and the intervals of leisure time between the hard work is where true
connections and friendships are formed and knowledge is shared. Thanks to our
host, we also had the opportunity to enjoy a lovely dinner and the beautiful
scenery of the city of Zagreb during the light festival season.

Many thanks to YFG, European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies and ‘Andrija Stampar’ School of Public Health for hosting this workshop. We hope the delivered ideas and solutions will be of use and have a positive impact on national health system. We look forward to our next meeting in another country!

Karin Schindler is a Nutritional Scientist and head of the department of
Mother, Child, Adolescence and Gender Health and Nutrition in the Austrian MoH.
In this function she is responsible for organizing the conference “People’s
food – people’s health: Towards healthy and sustainable European Food Systems”
during the 2018 EU presidency which she announced at the Forum 12: Sustainable
strategies for addressing health inequalities.

AF: How do we need to
change food systems to better foster health equity?

KS: Through collaboration, finding co-benefits and avoiding market failures.
Collaboration means that those who work along the food value chain in the
different sectors leave their silo and come together and find the benefits of
collaboration.

AF: So, which sectors would that be?

KS: Starting with the agricultural sector, farming but also fisheries, food
processing, transport, trade, retail, consumer sector… We also have to think
further to avoiding waste.

AF:What are the
co-benefits of investing in equitable food systems for the other sectors?

KS:For example, if you shorten the food supply chain, so that fresh fruit
fresh vegetables are easily accessible and affordable for consumers you also reduce
transport. That’s good for the environment. Also, the farmers can benefit
through a better economy, as well as the entire rural areas because staying in
a rural area is more attractive when you can participate in the economy.

AF:Can you think of any
best practice examples?

KS:Yes, there is a very nice best practice in Copenhagen where they have
changed public procurement: they now buy organic foods from the area. Through
that, they made an impact on the drinking water quality in the area.
They scaled up by educating those who work in public procurement, chefs and restaurant
workers, to spike up their interest in producing these foods or dishes. It
works well and shows these initiatives can actually work within the larger
community.

Another one is sugar taxation in the UK. I am not 100% convinced but
announcing the possibility of a sugar tax made producers reduce sugars in
beverages. Unfortunately, they replaced sugar by artificial sweeteners, so they
kept the level of sweetness, which I think we should avoid. We should reduce
our appetite for sugar, and this is about a habit that you learned while
growing up.

AF: So, can we
incentivise producers to actually do that?

KS:I think the only incentive is regulation, to say “you have to reduce the
sweetness and the sugar content”. Additionally, the consumers should be well-informed
and make informed choices.

We had a good example in Austria – the national broadcast institute did
a campaign on sugar. It was enormous!
Most of the TV broadcasts were included in the event. The people started
talking about sugar, the outreach was enormous. It’s still something people often
mention – “Oh you are drinking this? It has so much sugar!” Honestly, I don’t
know how much sugar some things have, because I don’t drink it anyhow, but
people got interested and this changed their habits.

AF: So, do you think
the campaign actually had a sustainable impact?

KS: In this case, I think so. But there is also a report by the World Bank that
states that campaigning is the least influential method. Reduced portion size
is seen as most influential, which makes sense – if you offer a smaller portion
size, people will eat less. The same goes with the processed foods – if there
are smaller portion sizes people will hopefully eat less, as long as it is not
too small, or if it’s not a big pack with a lot of small pieces in it.

AF: Why do you
personally care about equity in nutrition?

KS: Because I have the experience of
more than ten years working in a hospital in an out-patient clinic with morbidly
obese patients and with patients with diabetes. This experience has taught me
about the importance of the “I have the choice” and “I can change” attitudes.
It’s not easy, because behaviour is something you learn very early in your life.
To change something which has been a part of our mind-set for 40-50 years is very
difficult!

I have also seen that, if somebody is working hard the whole day, the
healthy choice has to be the easy choice! If you go through the supermarket and
you don’t have much time for shopping, you want to have the healthy things easily
available.

AF: So, there are many
systemic factors that influence our ability to make informed choices. And you
mentioned nudging…

KS: Yes, yes!

AF: We know now why you
personally care about the topic, but why do you think decision makers should
care about the topic and put it high up on the agenda?

KS: The topic of healthy eating?

AF: Healthy eating and
equity.

KS: I mean, we have
the data, it’s so clear that health and lower socio-economic status are closely
linked. If we don’t dedicate our time to these facts, the gap will increase between
the wealthy and those who have only little money in their pockets, and this is
not fair. Basically, what happens is that if you are born in an environment which
provides few chances, this probably means bad health in the end – and that’s just
not fair!

AF: And why should the
minister of finance care about this?

KS: Well, because if we don’t find solutions to solve problems of overweight
and obese people, as well as the increasing numbers of people with diabetes
(with a very early onset!), it will end up costing a lot.

Thirty years ago, diabetes was a disease of the aged – now it’s already a disease of much younger people. You have to imagine a young person, 30 years old, becoming diabetic, which means needing therapy, starting with Metformin, and then needing insulin. The medication is expensive, but that’s not even the biggest issue: these people are more often on sick leave, they are stigmatized on the labour market, they cannot find jobs, which means they stay at home, they get depressed, they need further medication… This is just a vicious cycle, and it ends up costing the society a lot of money.

AF:And all of these
consequences and economic costs would be preventable if we enable a healthy
start in life?

KS: I think they are preventable. I mean, there is a question we need to ask:
“how long do people suffer from diabetes?” Diabetes used to be a disease of the
elderly, but now it can start much earlier and can last for a lifetime. Even
with reduced life expectancy, there are many, many years where a lot of money is
spent. That’s it.

Further to an insightful session on the value of evidence in outcomes-based healthcare at this year’s European Health Forum Gastein, we sat down with Clayton Hamilton, leader of the WHO Regional Office for Europe’s Initiative for Digitalization of Health Systems, Division of Health Systems and Public Health at the WHO Regional Office for Europe, to talk about challenges and future trends in digital health, his passion for innovation and WHO’s role in supporting Member States on their journey towards digital innovation in health systems,

Clayton Hamilton

Clayton, after working in the area of digital healthfor more than 20 years, how would you describe the development of this field in the past years?

CH: Very generally, I think that, over the last five years, digital health has turned a major corner. It has grown as a discipline and in terms of its implementation size: while previously people thought of it as an add-on to health services, health care delivery and health information exchange, people now see digital health as front and center, and as a catalyst to a lot of the system transformation that we are looking to undertake. That is a move towards patient centered and integrated care.

Digital health continues to develop in a multitude of ways and encompasses everything from electronic health records to mobile health, to more emerging technologies, such as artificial intelligence and personalized medicine; and, of course, in between there are also a lot of medical devices and standards for interoperability and information exchange.

Digital health is certainly both comprehensive and
complex, which I think is very exciting and also an immense challenge, because
we have to define and classify digital health in a way that can be standardized
and understood by everyone.

Given digitalisation’s rapid growth and complexity, what do you think are the next innovations in the field of digital health and the use of outcomes-based evidence?

CH: I think the outcomes-based evidence is critically important, maybe more so now than ever before. We have a lot of innovations ongoing, many of which show a certain level of promise. What we need is to make sure that we have appropriate mechanisms to measure their cost-effectiveness, safety, reliability; and from that we can actually precipitate evidence that can be used to compare, clarify and base decisions upon. What we want is to avoid for the key decisions in health policy and administration to not be based on real evidence. So, the main issue is how you connect different data sources from across the health system in order to be able to actually obtain that reliable evidence and – most importantly – that such evidence is based upon high-quality data.

What do you think are the main challenges in
collecting real-world outcomes-based evidence?

CH: Well, the main challenge, again, is that the evidence is multifaceted and is often stored in a multitude of siloed systems. Even two, three, five years ago, clinical systems and hospital information systems were very much focused around a single institution and the exchange and management of patient pathways within one institution. They rarely considered how to exchange information outside of their own four walls. So again, we have to come back to standards for data exchange and interoperability: how do we ensure that the quality of data is to the highest level it can be and how do we exchange that data between different entities in the health sector?

There are also other challenges related to how data will be used and how do we assure the consent of individuals so that their data can be used appropriately and in an ethical way. Another challenge relates to the question of how we can leverage some of the new technologies in the best possible way for not only clinical care, but also for public health use. And I think this is both a challenge but also a very exciting point to address.

How do you define WHO Europe’s role in promoting and
implementing the reasonable use of real-world outcomes-based evidence?

CH: WHO’s commitment to supporting Member States’ in their national implementation of digital health is anchored in a new initiative requested by the Regional Director for WHO/Europe known as the Digitalisation of Health Systems, which is being implemented under the leadership of Dr Hans Kluge, Director for the Division of Health Systems and Public Health. The purpose of the initiative is to bring – in a holistic way – all of the technical and non-technical aspects of digital health implementation together so that we can clearly define the necessary building blocks and develop a road map to achieve digital success at national level. This includes an examination of the validity and use of real-world evidence and how it can be used to supplement other mechanisms for monitoring health system performance. We are also fully aware that this is not something we can or should do in isolation. Therefore, part of the initiative involves bringing together all of the relevant partners and stakeholders to provide a consolidated support offering to the 53 countries in the WHO European Region.

Following-up on this, do you think this is also a chance for WHO to take on a leading role in this innovation process and to show that the Organisation is prepared to support Member States to address the challenges that might arise during the process?

CH: Definitely, and I think there has been a huge shift in the Organisation towards not only realizing that it has to take on a leadership role, but that it is now actually actively engaged in delivering on that in the context of health systems strengthening and public health innovation. So yes, this is a chance for the WHO to renew its promise to the Member States, but also to define what it means to develop best practice within digital health and really take on a public health perspective.

In your opinion, what are the three arguments you would use towards
policy-makers to make the case for investment in digital health information infrastructure?

CH: Number one is that it will certainly lead to more efficient and
effective health systems and health care. For policy-makers, it is about avoiding
the waste of resources by bringing individual pieces together and creating more
effective and efficient health systems. These will ultimately lead to higher
quality at a patient outcome-level and that is really important.

Accordingly, the second point is about ensuring equity in the delivery of care. In light of the WHO’s goal of achieving universal health coverage, that means we need to ensure that each and every individual, each and every citizen, has access to the health care services they need without risking financial ruin or impoverishment. If policy-makers do not effectively leverage digital health, I am not sure we can achieve this public health goal.

The third argument is a rather future looking objective that policy makers have and relates back to the untapped value of data. Policy-makers are aware that high-quality health information is not only key for the future of healthcare delivery, but it is also an asset to help better manage the health system. In the future, we need to look much broader into how we can use data from both inside and outside the health sector for these purposes. The challenge for health systems will be to bring all of these elements together to effectively focus on the individual and move our health care from a treatment-based approach to a more preventative approach.

We would like to close with a more personal question. While you have been talking, one can see your passion for this topic. How come you got interested in digitalisation and digital health?

CH: Well, it is an interesting question. I am not sure if I was just at the right place at the right time, but I’ve always had a strong interest in various facets of technology. Already in my very early career as a consultant in Sydney, Australia, where I grew up, I had the fortune of working for a number of health technology companies. This was at a time when the concept of digital health did not even exist. It was very much a futuristic thing and I think that, since then, it has been like riding a wave. Almost every twist and turn has exposed something new, something exciting, and something intriguing.

I think what has also really kept me smiling and interested is knowing that digital health is having an impact on improving the life of many people and that in some small way, I have an opportunity to bring together the people and resources necessary to make a real difference. The next generation of youth is going to experience the digitalisation of health and health care and the potential of public health to really make the impact it has always promised. This is what keeps me going.

This interview was conducted by Young Gasteiners Patricia Dundler and Ramona Ludolph

Nicola Bedlington is European Patients’ Forum’s Secretary General since September 2014 and was previously the Executive Director since the setting up of the EPF Secretariat in June 2006.

TB: Mrs. Bedlington, can you please tell us what
is your position and main occupation?

NB: My name is Nicola Bedlington and I
am the Secretary General of the European Patients Forum (EPF), an organisation
that works with patients’ groups on public health and health advocacy across
Europe uniting the interests of and voice of patients. EPF helps to empower
patients’ organiations through educational programmes, policy initiatives and
projects. The European Patients Forum works with all the EU Institution and
also in close collaboration with other stakeholders in Brussels. My own
background is in the disability field at European level, and I have been with
EPF since 2006 when I set up the secretariat in Brussels.

OM: Based on what we heard in the session this morning, we would
like to hear your opinion on early patient engagement in medicine development.

NB: We are currently co-leading a specific project called PARADIGM , a Public Private Partnership, funded under the Innovative Medicines Initiative. PARADIGM aims to create a framework for meaningful patient engagement in the entire lifecycle of medicines, collaborating with the industry, the regulators, the HTA community and healthcare professionals, patients, and so on. We have three focal points within the project. One of them is prioritization of medicines research, another one is clinical trial design and the third one is the very crucial early dialogue between industries, regulators, the HTA community and patients on looking at the evidence requirements for specific product technologies. This project started only six months ago, and a strong focus has also been on the matrix of patient engagement, concretely why it matters and the difference it can make.

TB: Could you highlight any major challenges for
the project so far?

NB: I think that one of the advantages
is the good teamwork – we are a thirty-four-member consortium made up of
industry, academia, patients’ organisations, NGOs and ethics panels, and the
collaborative spirit is really there. One of the challenges is that it is a
very short project, it is only thirty months, so we need to achieve a lot in a
very short period. Thus, it is crucial that there is an alignment with other
organisations working on patient engagement to avoid any duplication. Rather
than looking at it from a competitive perspective, it is important to look at
the complementarity and synergies, so that we can move forward as effectively
as possible and create durable change in mindset and practice.

OM: From a regulatory framework perspective, is there anything that
would support you to better advocate for patients and support them in accessing
medicines?

NB: I think we could model what has
happened within the European Medicines Agency (EMA), which has a very strong
patient engagement strategy. So, patients are involved at all levels: on the
management board, in the scientific advisory committees. There is an ongoing
patients and consumers working party bringing together patient groups and
consumer groups, and the Pharmacovigilance Risk Assessment committee (PRAC) has
patients fully on board. These are all examples where patient engagement has
really been embedded and it would be nice to see similar approaches in other
areas, for example the HTA environment.

TB: How can we support patient engagement in the development of
healthcare services?

NB: In my opinion, this is really relevant, because it brings us back to the question “Do we ask the right questions?”. Therefore, patients need to be involved in this discussion – they are the ultimate recipients of healthcare services and what the healthcare system stands for. The right approach is therefore to involve them in the dialogue, rather than have them tick boxes. We must involve them in the discussion around what endpoints we are looking at, and what matters for them as patients in terms of outcomes. We need to move from patient reported outcomes, to patient designed and patient relevant outcome measures. We are collaborating with OECD on this issue through their PaRIS initiative.

OM: Is transparency something that is challenging between different
countries and bodies in your point of view?

NB: Transparency can be all sort of
things to different people. We have developed transparency guidelines with and
for our members. The aim of these guidelines is not about policing member organisations,
it is about encouraging them. The role of transparency is discussed not only in
relation to funding received from industry – it is also about the way of how we
do advocacy and consultancy work, the way our governance is structured, the way
we communicate and how we undertake projects. So, in short, our entire area of
activity. These guidelines have been very well received by our members. Another
example of transparency links to clinical trials. During the Clinical Trial Regulation
legislative pathway, we did a lot to make sure that there were appropriate
references to transparent publication of clinical trials’ results, also in
layperson’s terms, even if these trials go wrong. Obviously, transparency in
relation to pricing is also a big theme, we have mixed feedback from our
members: some of them wish for complete transparency, others prefer to get an
idea how prices are actually arrived at. We will be publishing an updated paper
on value and pricing where we call for a fair framework to ensure optimal
access to valuable innovation by patients across Europe. We need to find that
important balance between innovation and solidarity.

TB: Is there also a need for patient engagement
in the area of orphan drugs?

NB: I think there are a lot of unmet
needs in the area of rare diseases relating mostly to children. Big efforts are
being made to address some of the bottlenecks in the system. EURORDIS is
playing a critical role here as the representative voice of patients with rare
diseases, and EPF member.

This intervierw was conducted by Young Gasteiners Theresa Bengough and Oana Motea

Corina Pop (CP) served as Romanian State Secretary for Health from 2015 to October 2018. She coordinated the Project Implementation and Coordination Unit. At the EHFG plenary, she gave her perspective on “making the case for investment in health”. This interview is a follow-up on the heated plenary debate.

NP: During the plenary, you talked about the issue of ‘silo thinking’ and
how to better understand the dialogue
between health and finance decision-makers. We, as public health
professionals, are sometimes in the position of having plans for a health
project which we need to pitch to the finance ministry to convince them to
allocate a budget for it. We would be interested to hear your take on such
situations from the health perspective – how do you approach this challenge?

CP: First of all, I am a doctor, and I am not political. I am rather strictly a doctor in the position of the Ministry of Health. When I arrived at the MoH, one of the most important problems that I faced, and which is of particular interest to me, was that the doctors didn’t want to be involved in the projects. They are not interested in projects because running a project is very difficult. It is not like clinical or surgical medicine, or dentistry. It requires a type of work done by a civil servant. This means that you need to have a team, ideas, and you to spend a lot of time writing mails and talking about money and administration – this is why doctors do not want to be involved. I called everyone I know asking to help me run these projects because we had a reasonable amount of money at our disposal. For me, as a health system policy-maker, it means that you have to find both the resources and the beneficiaries. In order to promote your interests and projects, you need to convince not only the Ministry of Finance, but also the promoters who are the doctors, the managers of the hospitals etc. The promoters are especially interested in research and not in public health-related projects.

For
example, I have an important project for Romania that I care about a lot. It is about health economics. As
there is no specialist for health economics in Romania, I said ‘look we have to
prepare a project: first, we need a curriculum and a methodology, then we need
to find the professors, the teachers, the speakers, the experts, and finally we
need to train and pilot the first 20-30 doctors or economists’. Even though I
have written the guidelines and the programme, no one wants to run the project.
And this is not only about the funding, it is also about the interest in public
health.

BF: How do you think you could adjust this and make public health a more attractive specialty for doctors in Romania?

CP: It has to be specifically promoted during the undergraduate studies. What we need is for students to start learning about the importance of public health and health of the population as soon as they start studying medicine. It is important to talk about public health when talking about epidemiology in the first year. This way, the students have more options before they go the common way of choosing the surgical specialty which is associated with fame and lots of money. However, no one wants to talk about epidemiology, you know (laughs).

NP: Mr Hetemäki from Finland
mentioned the issue of trust being a key factor for collaboration, which can
only be based on a common understanding. Now adding that you also have to
convince the promoters, how do you actually achieve this?

CP: There are two dimensions. First, the evidence. Just saying ‘look I have a lot of evidence here, please give me the money’ is not enough to gain trust. Rather, you need to approach it by providing the evidence, i.e. number of saved women’s lives with cervical cancer. It is not like in a Disney cartoon in which you can achieve anything by repeating ‘please trust in me, trust in me’ (laughs). The second dimension is the team that will implement what you promise to do. However, I recently had a case of a very difficult and complex project in which the professionals were simply not able to promise to deliver a certain number of services. That is why the budgeting official said ‘OK, if you are not able to, you will not get the money’. It is very difficult to fight with the Ministry of Finance for trust. It is about the capacity-building and it is about the health workforce. That is why I said, ‘my wish for the Ministry of Finance is to be a good listener’, to have patience to explain that there is so much we can do, and this is not at all because we are unable. It is because health services are too complex. We have to be very patient and listen to the process. It should not be like in a marketplace: ‘how much do you want?’ ‘health spending is this much’, ‘which are the metrics?’, ‘OK, I won’t give any money’. This is impossible.

NP: Are there any tools to support you in convincing them?

CP: Yes, there are two partners you
need. One of them is a very good journalist, always capable of presenting the
problem. The second is the civil society, especially patient associations.
Together with journalists and patient societies/associations, we can convince the
Ministry of Finance. Not only with evidence, but with real life examples.

NP: I understand. We frequently
hear the financial sustainability of healthcare systems being questioned due to
challenges such as the aging population, unhealthy lifestyles and high prices
of new medicines and technologies. In your view, what needs to be done to
successfully address these challenges?

CP: The problems that require a lot of attention are related to innovation, ageing and costs of healthcare delivery. It should be taken case by case, though. Depending on the country, I can provide you with different answers. Regarding Romania, and the low-income countries, I have told you that it’s always about choosing between either prevention or treatment and diagnosis because all of these fall under the same budget. It is up to you to keep explaining the importance of keeping prevention high, because prevention will decrease the spending in the next 10 years. But the Ministry of Finance does not care about the next 10 years, especially if the elections are in 2 years. At the same time, you have to explain that it is impossible to spend only on prevention, because you have cases of cervical cancer that are happening right now, and need radiotherapy.

The problem is that they are not interested in prevention of lifestyle-associated diseases, because they do not understand the process from smoking and cancer to spending and expenditure. This is the process that we, as specialists, know all too well.

The budgeting officials are interested in taxing alcohol and smoking, but this money does not go to health. It means that you have to explain that we raise the taxes not only to gain more money, but also to prevent people form buying and consuming tobacco products, as well as to use that money to cure the already existing cancer. There needs to be a communication, one needs a lot of time to explain things that seem so trivial for us in public health.

BF: You were mentioning that these things are sometimes hard to explain. Do
you think that the direct benefits that the health system has, such as
contributing to people having longer lives and healthier lives, are measured
enough in the current system? And do we communicate these benefits enough?

CP: Surely it is not communicated enough. And I think that everybody talks about aging, but everybody talks about what problems you have when you are elderly. No one talks about how beautiful it is to have your grandchildren and to be healthy at the same time. It means to explain that good health gives you the gift to be healthy when you are elderly. It means that you are healthy enough to help your family and community. We have to live well and have a high quality of life.

BF: This leads me on to the next question. Public health is actively working on well-being and safety of the entire population. Do you think that the entire health system takes this into account? Sometimes I feel we have a system that is geared around the financial aspect and doesn’t take into account the things which we cannot quantify.

CP: Yes, it’s interesting, we just discussed this one two hours ago. I think that the Sustainable Development Goals address exactly these ‘uncountable’ aspects. If we talk about any of the SDGs, none of them is only about numbers: they talk about quality, well-being, air, nutrition, communicable diseases, safety, patient safety, water, transport… So, yes, it’s exactly about the SDGs.

BF: So you see the SDGs as a useful tool to help you?

CP: Very useful, but they are not promoted enough by the policymakers. They understood they would need to take care about the SDGs, to fulfil the targets, but they don’t really care. If the policymakers were to read, but really read the SDGs, they would understand they are faced with a complete political programme, and a very beneficial one. It is so complete, it is so about people, it’s so social, at the same time addressing health, economy and inequalities.

BF:Is
there any way that the SDGs have influenced or inspired you in the way you’re
tackling certain health issues in Romania?

CP: Yes, we had a lot of meetings. We had a
meeting with Zsuzsanna Jakab in July about SDGs, it was very important for
Romania, because she has the power to bring the politicians to the same table.

NP: Who participated, only health policymakers?

CP: No, the president of the country, the
directors of the whole university, the rectors of the universities.

BF:Did she
help you to get other people on board?

CP: Yes, certainly, she has the power to do that. She’s wonderful in doing something to get all the policymakers on the same table, and without punishing any, she convinced them that was important to work for health.

This interview was conducted by the Young Gasteiners Beatrice Farrugia (BF) and Nataša Peric (NP).